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Download PDF Trends Microbiology January 2014 Volume 22


Sinopsis

In the October issue of Trends in Microbiology, Norris [1] and Tychinin and Kamnev [2] discuss the worldwide problem of writing a scientific paper at a level that is ‘adequate’ especially for non-native English speakers. Many of us, when reviewing papers or projects of our peers, or writing our own papers, are aware of the difficulty in communicating science and the results of scientific research in a manner that is both appealing and grammatically correct. The stylistic differences between American and British English pose an additional problem for non-native English speakers when formatting or editing a paper for a journal, as well as the differences in punctuation and spelling.

Content

  1. ‘Globish-lization’: a worldwide non-native English problem or a chance to evolve?
  2. Seeing is believing: what experiments with microbes reveal about evolution
  3. Handle energy resources with care
  4. To harm or not to harm? On the evolution and expression of virulence in group A streptococci
  5. PVC bacteria: variation of, but not exception to, the Gram-negative cell plan
  6. Cell targeting by the Staphylococcus aureus pore-forming toxins: it’s not just about lipids
  7. The role of bacterial phytotoxins in inhibiting the eukaryotic proteasome
  8. The role of aquatic ecosystems as reservoirs of antibiotic resistance
  9. The emergence of mecC methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus



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